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Topic: Trucking wort? (Read 3579 times)

Hey everyone,I got a message from a buddy of mine down in Tennessee, who said Granite City Brewery makes their wort in Iowa, and then trucks it to other locations to be "finished off"? Frankly, this seems ridiculous to me. But are any of you aware of a good reason to do this?

Here's what he said:"This isn't for a story, but it came up in the process of reporting on a new brewery expanding to this area. Granite City says they begin the brewing process in Iowa then truck the wort to their locations across the Midwest and finish the beersthere. They'll be using this practice for a new location in Williamson County, TN, just south of Nashville."

I've heard of this before. They truck the wort out of state and add yeast where it will be sold to avoid paying taxes on the alcohol transport between states. It's not beer until there is yeast added. Very tricky! At least, that's the story I've heard about Granite City.

I've heard of this before. They truck the wort out of state and add yeast where it will be sold to avoid paying taxes on the alcohol transport between states. It's not beer until there is yeast added. Very tricky! At least, that's the story I've heard about Granite City.

You as a brewer pay excise tax in the state where it is sold/consumed. I am not aware of any transportation tax.

Could it have to do with avoiding using a distributor? I'm thinking that if they transport beer, maybe they are forced to use a distributor, whereas wort they can truck on their own and "make beer" on site.

I've heard the same thing about Granite City. Only thing I heard differently is that the wort comes out of their home base location in Sioux Falls, SD. not Iowa. I don't have anything to back either version up though. Not arguing, it just seemed more logical that it be shipped from where the company started. Either way, they ship wort and pitch yeast onsite.

Here in Iowa with our entrenched family monopolies, also know as beer distributors, its probably the only way to make any money shipping your own "beer" in.

I wonder if you'd risk oxidation by shipping the wort? Obviously there are ways around this problem, of course. (Alternatively, you could dehydrate it, instruct the user to rehydrate with room-temp bottled water and pitch yeast, and compete with Mr. Beer.)

I'd be more concerned about contamination, unless they boil and hop it at the other facility.

I would think they would boil and hop centrally as the whole point of this (at least as near as we can tell) is so that each individual brewpub doesn't have to have mashtun, brew kettles, etc. They just need fermenters.